PowerfulPeace.NET

Smart Power from a Retired SEAL

56. Let’s Exchange Combat Photos and Discuss Powerful Peace

A Poignant Message from a Special Forces Operator

Good Reader, the most profound event occurred this week. Powerful Peace has been growing so dramatically in support from every sector, from peace hippies to religious leaders to my still-serving SEAL Teammates; this incident provides dramatic testimony to what we’re all experiencing.

It’s especially apropos to note that this movement is coming of age in the geographic ground-zero of military operations and violent extremist ideologies in the world today: Baghdad, my home for the year.

Back to the narrative: A couple of days ago I received an email from a Special Forces friend in support of Powerful Peace. Specifically, he said, “Keep up the great message.”

In the same email, he attached inner circle (meant for those of us in the community) photos of his commando unit during recent combat operations in Afghanistan.

Imagine this: ongoing combat operations, conducting what Powerful Peace terms “necessary violence” in defense of military units and townspeople in remote wastelands…combined with an appreciation of this “great message”.

Is your mind beginning to wrap around the surreal nature of the interaction?

We all want peace; we just acknowledge it in different ways. SEALs want safety and security for their families, as do schoolteachers, electricians, musicians, ministers and generals.

Those who are involved in peacemaking within their domain (which ultimately could include every member of the species) understand the steps they can take within their domain. If you are not directly involved in tactical operations, would you have considered that SEALs and Green Berets would line up behind Powerful Peace as a “great message”, or would you have assumed that we all just want to hurt things?

There is a great surge of awareness rising worldwide for what is being advocated in Powerful Peace. In her Secretarial confirmation hearing this week, Senator Clinton emphasized one, primary point for the global way ahead: the urgency of America’s embracing the balanced use of hard and soft power, or what we all now call “Smart Power”. Again, it is important to tip a hat to former Assistant Secretary of Defense Joseph Nye for coining the terms Soft and Smart Power, now so comfortably ingrained in the national vernacular.

President-elect Obama has been saying essentially the same thing for months as he stressed increased diplomatic engagement worldwide without ignoring the potential need for force (again, “necessary violence”, which is grossly outweighed by vast currents of ignorance-based “unnecessary violence” coursing across the planet).

Powerful Peace Enlists the Universal Desire for Security

Powerful Peace regulars and other, longer-term customers of mine have heard this message, in every way I could think to say it, for many years. One version of this message is the “Think Like the Adversary” briefing I wrote and began presenting to government clients soon after 9/11.

Engagement! It edifies all sides. Communication! We shy away from such common-sense measures in our marriages, in our neighborhoods, and in our international conflicts. Engagement has an undeserved bad rap. It is not some touchy-feely appeasement, but an invaluable tool that everyone must use – if for no other reason than to benefit themselves.

I don’t need to like you in order to benefit from engagement with you.

One common side-effect of engagement is that we actually can come to like a former opponent; maybe this is why we shy away from it. It threatens to shake up our worldview.

Great warriors and great diplomats alike have preached for millenia: “Know the other, and know yourself.” Engagement is the most effective method for developing both of these.

Not engaging leads to inaccurate assessments, increasing a sense of isolation with its corresponding suspicion/animosity, and opportunities for the most ridiculous assumptions to fill in the intentionally unknown space between.

For example, I was taught as a child in the 70’s to “kill a Commie for Mommy”. Is this propaganda any less obvious than that of the Soviets, the Chinese and the contemporary Iranian government?

As lyrical evidence, I present the following song made famous by Sting during the height of the Cold War in the 1980’s. This was the same time that I set off into the world to learn Russian, become a great Soviet specialist, and counter the Red Menace that kept millions on edge about the mysterious threat.

It is also the time that a small voice in the back of my young mind said that “they” were as human as “we”; it told me, privately and confidently, that one day I would work alongside these greatly exaggerated boogie-men. (For that story, please read an earlier Powerful Peace article published in 2008.)

“Russians”

In Europe and America, there’s a growing feeling of hysteria
Conditioned to respond to all the threats
In the rhetorical speeches of the Soviets
Mr. Krushchev said we will bury you
I don’t subscribe to this point of view
It would be such an ignorant thing to do
If the Russians love their children too

How can I save my little boy from Oppenheimer’s deadly toy
There is no monopoly in common sense
On either side of the political fence
We share the same biology
Regardless of ideology
Believe me when I say to you
I hope the Russians love their children too

There is no historical precedent
To put the words in the mouth of the President
There’s no such thing as a winnable war
It’s a lie that we don’t believe anymore
Mr. Reagan says we will protect you
I don’t subscribe to this point of view
Believe me when I say to you
I hope the Russians love their children too

We share the same biology
Regardless of ideology
What might save us, me, and you
Is if the Russians love their children too

Copyright © 2009 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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January 16, 2009 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments Yet

55. The Cellist of Sarajevo

“Listen. Never, ever, regret or apologise for believing that when one man or one woman decides to risk addressing the world with truth, the world may stop what it is doing and hear. There is too much evidence to the contrary. When we cease believing this, the music will surely stop. The myth of the impossible dream is more powerful than all the facts of history.”

- Robert Fulgham

This weekend found me “dialoguing” via comment entries on jazz legend Wynton Marsalis’ official website. That dialogue led to my discovery of Wynton’s new book, Moving to Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your Life…which I will own as soon as Amazon.com can leap into action.

The discovery of this important book on the Power(ful Peace) of music and musicians next led to my re-discovery of an incredible story I’d forgotten for years…the Cellist of Sarajevo. Below, with full credit to the author at LifePositive.com, is a moving, stunning, scorching account of Powerful Peace in action. If you don’t mist up during this reading, you should probably get your tear ducts examined.

The Cellist of Sarajevo

by Swati Chopra

What do we do when faced with unspeakable horror?

Play music is what a resident of Sarajevo, capital of Bosnia, did, even as bombs rained around him. His is a story of courage and grace in difficult times

A musician walks on stage to the sound of deafening applause. He is in his coattails, dressed in black. He bows, sits down on a concert chair and takes an instrument in his hands. Let’s say it’s an old cello the colour of burgundy. A few quiet moments as he prepares himself. And then, the music flows.

This is a routine every Western classical musician is familiar with. As was Vedran Smailovic, principal cellist of the Sarajevo Opera, when he decided to perform it in the middle of the war zone that his neighbourhood had become. The year was 1992. The former Yugoslavia had erupted in ethnic strife and beautiful Sarajevo, with its rich theatre and art traditions, had transformed into Europe’s “capital of hell”.

At 4 pm on May 27, as a long queue waited patiently for bread in front of one of the last functional bakeries in the city, a mortar shell dropped in the middle of it, killing 22 people instantly. Smailovic looked out of his window to find flesh, blood, bone, and rubble splattered over the area. It was the moment he knew he had had enough.

Smailovic was 37 at the time, widely recognised as an exceptionally talented cello player. Till 1992, he had been occupied with his involvements in the Sarajevo Opera, the Sarajevo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Symphony Orchestra RTV Sarajevo, and the National Theatre of Sarajevo, as well as playing the festival circuit and working in recording studios.

Looking back on that period, Smailovic describes himself and his associates as being “totally naïve”.  So great was their confidence in their unity and plurality, he says, that even when they were watching what was happening in other parts of Yugoslavia, they felt absolutely certain that similar destruction could never happen in Sarajevo, that it would be impossible to destroy such strong unity. That dream was shattered by 1992.

Smailovic felt enraged by what was happening around him and powerless to do anything about it. He was neither a politician nor a soldier, just a musician. How could he do anything about the war? Did that mean he would just stand by and watch people die, fearing all the while for his own life? In the long, dark night that followed the bread-queue massacre, Smailovic thought long and deep. With the dawn of a new day, he had made up his mind that he would do something, and that something would be what he knew best – make music.

So every evening after that, at 4 pm, Smailovic would walk to the middle of the street, where the massacre had occurred. He would be dressed formally, as for a performance. There he would sit, on a battered camp stool placed in the crater made by the shell, his cello in his hand, playing music. All around him, mortar shells and bullets would fly. Yet he would play on regardless, perhaps substituting the war noise with applause in his mind.    

For 22 days, one each for the people killed, Smailovic played in the same spot. He played to ruined homes, smouldering fires, scared people hiding in basements. He played for human dignity that is the first casualty in war. Ultimately, he played for life, for peace, and for the possibility of hope that exists even in the darkest hour. Asked by a journalist whether he was not crazy doing what he was doing, Smailovic replied: “You ask me am I crazy for playing the cello, why do you not ask if they are not crazy for shelling Sarajevo?”

Smailovic continued to play his music of hope until December 1993, in graveyards and bombsites. He had decided to “daily offer a musical prayer for peace”, he said. As his story began to filter into the press, he became a symbol for peace in Bosnia. An English composer, David Wilde, was so moved by the story that he wrote a composition for unaccompanied cello, simply called ‘The Cellist of Sarajevo’, into which he poured his own feelings of outrage, love, and brotherhood with Vedran Smailovic.

Celebrated cellist Yo Yo Ma played this piece at the International Cello Festival in Manchester, England, in 1994. Pianist Paul Sullivan, who was present, describes it thus: “Quietly, almost imperceptibly, the music began, stealing out into the hushed hall and creating a shadowy, empty universe, ominous with the presence of death, haunting in its echoes. Slowly it built, growing relentlessly into an agonised, screaming, slashing furore, gripping us all, before subsiding at last into a hollow death rattle, and finally, back to the silence from which it had begun.

“When he had finished, Yo Yo Ma remained bent over his cello. His bow still rested on the strings. No one in the hall moved, not a sound was made for a long, long time. It was as though we had just witnessed that horrifying massacre ourselves. Finally still in silence, Yo Yo slowly straightened in his chair, looked out across the audience, and stretched out his hand toward us. All eyes followed as he beckoned someone to come to the stage, and an indescribable electric shock swept over us as we realised who it was: Vedran Smailovic – the cellist of Sarajevo himself! He rose from his seat and walked down the aisle as Yo Yo came off the stage and headed up the aisle to meet him. With arms flung wide, they met each other in a passionate embrace just inches from my seat.

“The drama was unbelievable, as everyone in the hall leaped to his or her feet in a chaotic emotional frenzy: clapping, weeping, shouting, embracing, and cheering. It was deafening, overwhelming, a tidal wave of emotion. And in the centre of it stood these two men, still hugging, both crying freely. Yo Yo Ma, the suave, elegant prince of classical music worldwide, flawless in appearance and performance. And Vedran Smailovic, who had just escaped from Sarajevo, dressed in a stained and tattered leather motorcycle suit with fringe on the arms. His wild long hair and huge moustache framed a face that looked old beyond his years, creased with pain and soaked with so many tears.”

In the years since his heroic anti-war statement, Smailovic has relocated to Belfast, Ireland, where he performs, composes, conducts, and produces music locally and internationally. But the message of this story is greater than the man who made it. As American philosopher Robert Fulghum says in his book Maybe (Maybe Not): Second Thoughts From a Secret Life: “Listen. Never, ever, regret or apologise for believing that when one man or one woman decides to risk addressing the world with truth, the world may stop what it is doing and hear. There is too much evidence to the contrary. When we cease believing this, the music will surely stop. The myth of the impossible dream is more powerful than all the facts of history. In my imagination, I lay flowers at the statue memorialising Vedran Smailovic – a monument that has not yet been built, but may be.”

Copyright © 2009 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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January 11, 2009 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments Yet

54. Are You With Us or Against Us?

Powerful Peace is apolitical. I want the reader to understand that before the following sensitive discussion begins.

The title of this article is not a criticism against President Bush for using strong words seven years ago. Neither is it an endorsement of those words, which should simply be considered in the context of that terrible and historic time.

This article is about a man who bumped – no, slammed – into me at the airport in Kuwait this week.

In a bizarre turn of events, I was moving with a group of Americans through the crowded terminal and found myself momentarily blocked by another man, who was being momentarily impeded by a third. It was a simple people-jam, and would have resolved in seconds. In profile, the bearded man just in front of me looked surprisingly like a good friend from Egypt, but I was thinking that the odds of this being Kami were statistically impossible.

My musing was abruptly interrupted by what can only be described as a low-impact, hockey-style body check by the American behind me, as he literally bounced my 220-pound frame out of the way so that he could hurry to catch up to the group. I kept my cool (probably not as well as I like to think) and followed close behind. Once I reached him I got in his face and said, “We’re all going to the same place. There’s no reason to slam into anyone!”

He looked really surprised at the American English coming out of my own shaggy beard and became profusely apologetic. Unfortunately, his apology was ten times more infuriating than the unbelievable, initial body check.

“I’m really sorry, dude – I didn’t realize you were with us!”

I was stunned by his explanation.

With us?

“With us??”

I knew that by “us” he meant the American group, and I could have taken the apology for what it was worth – despite the stink of blatant (and probably unconscious) bigotry. However, this brief encounter is an irresistable teaching point for Powerful Peace, so it swirled in my mind until I could return to the keyboard.

There is no “us”.

Of course, there are Blacks and Whites, men and women, Jews and Christians and Muslims…that’s not what I’m saying. All of these distinctions are part of the natural, healthy mosaic of what it means to be members of the human race. The point is, there is no “us” in the context of his apology.

You see, what the American bigot did in that crowd is define for all the rest of us, by deed, his own understanding of We and They. Without a word, he proved that he finds it acceptable to smash into Them to get where he wants to go, but not into Us, the group of which I happen to be a member.

“They” don’t deserve respect, and “We” do. It’s really that simple.

Now, while this unpleasant encounter is offensive enough at first glance, the deeper and much more profound effect ripples outward and begs to be examined. This second effect is what infuriated me.

When a person behaves like that in a place like that, the locals very reasonably find it unacceptable. While they may not confront the offender the way I did, they inevitably file it away in memory. When another outsider behaves similarly, and another after that, this resentment grows. At some point a prejudice is formed against my entire group. A prime example is the term, “Ugly American”, which certainly could not have formed and spread from one or two isolated incidents.

Now when I again pass through this same area, my experience will be colored by the attitudes of these prejudiced locals. I may get poor service, I may be harassed, I may even be assaulted by some of the more hot-headed youths. Despite my best efforts to “get along” in every environment, my own best efforts may be overcome by the stupid, offensive choices of my peers.

The same threat exists toward the safety and peace of mind of my spouse, my child, my other companions….

Most stupidly of all, even the bigot’s own future experience in that place will be negatively colored by his own offenses.

We each need to take a good, long look at the potential consequences of our choices. We are an amazing race, the humans. Our species has the capacity for infinite, creative genius….

….And yet even the dumbest dog won’t defecate where he sleeps.

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By the way, in case you were still wondering: yes, it was Kami. I caught up with him a half hour later.

Copyright © 2009 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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January 6, 2009 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments Yet

50. R & R, the Poem

Dedicated to everyone who ever went away to war…and everyone they ever left behind.

R & R (Rest and Relaxation, or military leave)
by Jack Oatmon (PowerfulPeace.net)

I lost a few friends
Just a few days ago
They died in the desert
Now I’m in the snow

They fell all around me
Now I’m in my bed
I’ll rise in the morning
My brothers are dead

I’ll be okay if you’re a few minutes late
Airplane, take your time

Oh, God, how I miss them
Those brothers of mine
My family surrounds me
They pray I’ll be fine

I’m kissing my mother,
My daughter, my wife
This leave’s almost over
It’s back to real life

I’ll be okay if you’re a few hours late
Airplane, take your time

I knew when I signed up
I might go to war
I’m willing to fight, that’s
What freedom is for

It’s just that this time home
Is never enough
I don’t mean to snivel
But damn, this is tough

I’ll be okay if you’re a few days late
Airplane, take your time

I feel so much older
Than friends that I meet
I understand now why
We say “bittersweet”

I’ve been gone for months
I’ll be gone for months more
This respite is precious…
Surreal…back to war

I’ll be okay if you’re a few minutes late
Airplane, take your time

Copyright © 2008 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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December 24, 2008 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments Yet

48. I’m Sorry for What We’ve Done to Ourselves

After a particularly valuable engagement with a local Coalition leader here in Baghdad today, I set out for a beautiful, cool-sunny afternoon stroll back to my office at the palace. Walking alongside a shimmering lake, I felt drawn to stop by the mosque I’d noticed en route.

According to custom – and military law – I did not enter the facility (I’ve been accompanied into several others by Muslim friends), but I did poke my nose in around the outside. My buoyant mood was transformed into an anchor.

I’ve always wandered, and I’m always saddened to discover abandoned houses of worship in my wanderings. They represent centers of community and spirituality that simply aren’t doing their jobs any more. Inevitably, they represent a place in which crime, poverty, or in this case, war, have overcome the local population’s ability to satisfy its need to congregate.

Each of these places has seen its former occupants of self-sacrifice, humility and generosity replaced by dust and bird droppings. Most, of course, are not physically scarred by the wounds of war as this is. I can’t know which “side” is responsible for slamming high caliber rounds into one wall of this building and shattering out some of the carefully crafted windows. Probably both sides. (In Afghanistan, entire towns have been leveled by heavy weapons; 95% of that ordnance was fired by Afghans of one group or another. Despite the physical shattering of these communities, the people still live there…simply because that’s where they live.)

I’m reminded that the loss is not limited to this formerly-beautiful site, or this type of damage. Isolated American soldiers displaying very poor judgment have shot bullets through the Qur’an, abused the Qur’an in other ways, and made deliberately antagonistic comments about Islam’s Prophet Mohammed.

The loss is not limited to this faith. Men calling themselves Muslims have pointedly massacred Christian and Jewish men, women, and children. They’ve done the same to the “other” kind of Muslim (Sunni on Shi’a and vice-versa). They’ve even brutally raped women of their own “kind” of Muslim in the name of righteous discipline.

The loss is not limited to faith on faith. Some individuals take great pleasure in attacking a religion not to their liking, such as the late Robert Mapplethorpe’s photo of the crucifix in a glass of urine, compassionately titled Piss Christ. (No, I won’t show that particular piece of “art” in this forum. You’ll have to Google it yourself.)

As you may have deduced by now, the point of this piece is that disrespect of others’ personal beliefs is a harmful thing – ultimately, even to the disrespecter. Is it not possible for us to simply heed the famously common-sensical words; “People, I just want to say, you know, can we all get along?”

 

Copyright © 2008 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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December 4, 2008 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

47. A Powerful, Peaceful Holiday Poem

My friend sent me this poem yesterday, and I delayed publishing it until I could do it during my favorite month of the year, December. December brings Christmas, which is my absolute favorite time of the year.

I know, however, that for various reasons many people don’t share that feeling. One may have lost a loved one at Christmas, as I did at Thanksgiving. Many don’t celebrate Christmas because it’s not relevant to their faith. Still others just have a rough time during the holidays.

Whatever your particular circumstances, Powerful Peace exists on a higher plane than our personal moments of happy and sad, intent on the basic human goodness that transcends our oh-so-human peculiarities. Whatever your background, I hope this goodness as illustrated by this beautiful rhyme will comfort you and give you pause:

A Different Christmas Poem

The embers glowed softly, and in their dim light,
I gazed ’round the room and I cherished the sight.
My wife was asleep, with her head on my chest,
My daughter beside me, angelic in rest.
Outside the snow fell, a blanket of white, 
Transforming the yard to a winter delight.

The sparkling lights in the tree I believe, 
Completed the magic that was Christmas Eve.
My eyelids were heavy, my breathing was deep, 
Secure and surrounded by love I would sleep.
In perfect contentment, or so it would seem, 
So I slumbered - perhaps I started to dream.

The sound wasn’t loud, and it wasn’t too near, 
But I opened my eyes when it tickled my ear.
Perhaps just a cough, I didn’t quite know,
Then the sure sound of footsteps outside in the snow.
My soul gave a tremble, I struggled to hear, 
And I crept to the door just to see who was near.

Standing out in the cold and the dark of the night, 
A lone figure stood, his face weary and tight.
A soldier, I puzzled, some twenty years old, 
Perhaps a Marine, huddled here in the cold.
Alone in the dark, he looked up and smiled, 
Standing watch over me, and my wife and my child.

“What are you doing?” I asked without fear, 
“Come in this moment, it’s freezing out here!
Put down your pack, brush the snow from your sleeve, 
You should be home on a cold Christmas Eve!”
For barely a moment I saw his eyes shift, 
Away from the cold and the snow blown in drifts…

…To the window that danced with a warm fire’s light 
Then he sighed, and he said, “It’s really all right, 
I’m out here by choice. I’m here every night.
It’s my duty to stand at the front of the line, 
That separates you from the darkest of times. 

“None had to ask or to beg or implore me, 
I’m proud to stand here like my fathers before me.
My Gramps died at Pearl on a day in December,”
Then he sighed, “That’s a Christmas Gram always remembers.
My dad stood his watch in the jungles of ‘Nam,
And now it’s my turn, and so, here I am.

“I’ve not seen my own son in more than a while, 
But my wife sends me pictures, he’s sure got her smile.”
Then he bent and he carefully pulled from his bag,
The red, white, and blue… an American flag.
“I can live through the cold and the being alone,
Away from my family, my house and my home. 

“I can stand at my post through the rain and the sleet,
I can sleep in a foxhole with little to eat.
I can carry the weight of killing another, 
Or lay down my life with my sister and brother,
Who stand at the front against any and all,
To ensure for all time that this flag will not fall.

“So go back inside,” he said, “harbor no fright, 
Your family is waiting and I’ll be all right.”
“But isn’t there something I can do, at the least, 
Give you money,” I asked, “or prepare you a feast?
It seems all too little for all that you’ve done, 
For being away from your wife and your son
.” 

Then his eye welled a tear that held no regret,
“Just tell us you love us, and never forget.
To fight for our rights back at home while we’re gone,
To stand your own watch, no matter how long.
For when we come home, either standing or dead,
To know you remember we fought and we bled
Is payment enough, and with that we’ll trust,
That we mattered to you as you mattered to us.”

Copyright © 2008 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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December 1, 2008 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

44. Hope – It Screams

I spoke today with an Iraqi Army General on the subject of our way ahead in Iraq. Like many of his peers, he has invaluable insight on problems and solutions regarding the ongoing struggle for Iraq. Like many of his peers, his recommendations (the other-than-combat efforts we will need for a long-term “win”) sometimes compete with more immediate Coalition needs for force protection and combat readiness.

Hope in Iraq

Hope in Iraq

Hope, we concluded, is the most urgent commodity we can provide to the men and women of this ancient, noble and profoundly historic land. There are many other essential ingredients; most of them are merely steps along the path to hope.

Hope screams to be heard. Hope screams, desperately, to be felt.

It’s just at the edge of their hearing, for some of these. Hope is screaming its fool head off, just – just barely – out of reach from hundreds of thousands of decent people who can’t take their children to the market with them.

It’s just beyond the hearing of people without enough power, work, or water that won’t make them sick.

I can hear hope. In fact, I can’t hear anything else. It’s inevitable, now. I sense hope itself trembling in the unlimited potential of this moment. Hope knows its release is just around the corner. Any day, any moment, and hope will burst forth across this torn landscape like a storm. Those who fought for stability will fight ten times harder, in ten thousand little ways. But right now, before this great release, it’s so hard for many residents of Iraq to know hope.

Unemployed men with small children dying of illness and malnutrition fear to step forward to accept work with the Coalition, knowing that cruel, organized thugs may torture and kill a father who seeks to provide for his family in this way. Losing the only breadwinner jeopardizes the wife and other children in homes from which these fathers are too frequently lost.

My friend Jamal lost his family home, lifelong friends, and fiancee when he was identified as an interpreter. He very nearly lost much more.

On the other hand, there simply is not a great deal of work available with Coalition forces even for the willing, since positions for locals are competitive and jealously guarded.

In a society so wracked with danger and fear, much of the work from commerce and production is likewise only a memory. There is very little demand for non-essentials; when a citizen ventures to the market downtown even for necessities he knows he takes his life in his hands. There may be a car bomb rolling up to any part of any bazaar at any moment.

The citizens of Iraq are in desperate need of hope in order for them to see any purpose in striving and risking for change. When hope dies, initiative follows. Why bother?

In contrast to this dangerous apathy, I recently published an extracted article on the Baghdad Zoo now being open, safe, and enjoyed. (See A Walk in the Park). When a couple can take their little ones to such a pleasant and ordinary place, this glimmer called hope begins to take root. They taste freedom from insecurity – and like it. They begin to ponder the instability and terrors of the family neighborhood, and find a fresh energy to reclaim this rightful territory for the good of all.

They begin to say…”Oh, hell, no! Anything is better than this.”

The energy of hope can produce startling results. In a book entitled Let’s Roll, we read the story of true heroes, doomed passengers on a hijacked plane. They had some certainty that something very bad was going to happen with their plane. They realized that there might not be anything they could do about it…but they hoped they could. They hoped they could, and they acted.

They saw no gain in hiding in the herd and praying not to be the next one culled. They acted in the hope of stopping terrorists with their own hands. They succeeded. With this hope and their own hands, they saved hundreds or thousands of other innocent lives. They died, yes – they died because fighting to defend involves risk, and some pay the price for the rest.

Hope is something that can be given. It can’t be forced, because a person can not be “convinced” of something against his will. Hope can be inspired by example, as when the United States of America still inspires the hope of a better life for hundreds of millions who live in tragic poverty. Hope can be revealed in the genuine, consistent effort of outreach from those who have to those who have not.

Hope sometimes stays out of reach for those without hope, until someone who holds it…offers it. In some cases, it must be given from one group of people to another. Or, from one group of nations to another. When we grasp hope firmly in our hands, we perceive the extraordinary future we can create.

This isn’t a war for Americans to bring peace, or for “the West” to establish democracy, or for any other reason than simply this: this war in Iraq, however it may have started, is a war for the Iraqi people to experience hope, say “Let’s Roll”, and take back their land for peace and safety.

Hope screams to be known. With hope, anything is possible.

Without it, nothing is.

Copyright © 2008 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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November 17, 2008 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

43. The Whole, Impartial Truth (TWIT 01) A Walk in the Park

Welcome to the Grand Opening edition of The Whole, Impartial Truth, a new and sporadic exposition of what’s “really” going on out here in Iraq.

By implying that you aren’t already getting the whole truth, I don’t mean that anyone is lying. Rather, I’m acknowledging that agenda drives communication; whether it’s a husband arguing for a big-screen TV or a statesman seeking concessions from a neighbor country, the skillful use of words creates a reality.

Each writer writes from a personal perspective, and not all media outlets provide an actual fair and balanced picture. Because of each outlet’s agenda, in fact, it may even be fair to say that not one commercial outlet provides a full and unbiased version of life as it occurs.

                Here’s an example:

The Pope and President George W. Bush were fishing in a little rowboat one day. A gust of wind blew the Pope Hat off the Pope’s head and splashed it in the pond 10 yards away. The Pope was beside himself, naturally, because this is an important symbol of his office. President Bush calmly rose, stepped onto the surface of the pond, and walked over to recover the Pope Hat.

The next morning, headlines across the country blared out, “George Bush Can’t Swim” (Thanks, Gabe!)

Here’s another example. In the days before this presidential election, I was amazed to hear CNN and Fox News paint two realities based on this one, undisputable fact: the polls favored Obama 52 to McCain’s 44. Here are the two realities:

CNN: “Senator Obama continues to surge ahead with his ever-widening gap.”

Fox: “Senator McCain is really making a comeback as the gap rapidly disappears.”

(Please understand that those are not actual quotes, but paraphrasings. I don’t want to be accused of still further distortion of the truth!)

So, while Powerful Peace recognizes the existence of continuing beheadings and that little girls have been blown up by terrorist bombs as recently as this week, we must also keep in our hearts the stories that don’t sell commercial airtime such as the following, lifted intact from the “Coalition Chronicle” magazine that we read out here in the sandbox:

Baghdad Zoo – Returning to Normal

- Army Staff Sergeant James Hunter

BAGHDAD - The Baghdad Zoo opened its doors to Iraqi citizens in 1971. Since then, it has been a key centerpiece to the lives of many Iraqis. Many travel from throughout Iraq to enjoy a peaceful day at the zoo with their families.

Time Alone
Time Alone

Due to the potential threat of violence and security issues in Iraq however, the last several years have not brought many people to the zoo as many feared leaving their neighborhoods and the safety and security of their own homes.

“After coalition forces pushed into Iraq, ousting the Saddam Hussein regime in 2003, the zoo and surrounding park were left unattended and desolate,” said Staff Sgt. Paul Sanford…. “Animals were abandoned, stolen or freed by looters and the park grounds were vandalized.”

It was nearly two years before coalition forces began to seriously focus their efforts on the zoo after troops gained a foothold on the adjacent International Zone, which provided the opportunity for Dr. Salah, the Zawra Park director, and Dr. Adel Mousa, the zoo’s director, to truly begin rebuilding the area.

Their efforts, combined with the efforts of MND-B [Multi-National Division, Baghdad], have brought life back into the zoo.

With Daddy at the Zoo
With Daddy at the Zoo

“The people of [Iraq] visit the zoo quite frequently,” said Sanford, who works closely with the zoo’s director. “It is a central location that helps them see the future of Iraq as a revitalized society and continues to build family relationships and a sense of normalcy in an area so often torn by hardship and conflict. Visiting the zoo and the surrounding Zawra Park area is as much a family outing here in Iraq as it is in the United States.

This time to forge friendships and strengthen family ties would not be where it is today without the efforts of Iraqi security forces and MND-B troops positioned throughout greater Baghdad.

When Iraqi security forces and MND-B cracked down on special groups extremists and sent many fleeing the area, it brought new life and a sense of normalcy back to the Iraqi people.

“The current security situation has been one of stabilization and peace in the area, drawing more families from their home and into the park and zoo for leisure and recreational activities once thought to be too risky to chance,” said Sanford. “The continued effort of both coalition forces and the Government of Iraq have allowed people who once only ventured out for necessity to stray far from their homes at times, even if just to see the new tigers, Hope and Riley, now being proudly displayed.”

Mousa said he now sees a secure place for people from all over Iraq to visit.

Family Picnic at the Zoo

Family Picnic at the Zoo

“The people are all smiling; they are happy,” the zoo director said.

The security situation has made many Iraqis happy people, but none may be as happy as those children who walk through the gates of the Baghdad Zoo daily to see the lions, tigers, bears, an array of fish, flamingos, crocodiles, alligators or even a little girl’s favorite, a pony.

Many are seen smiling, maybe some a bit frightened by those larger animals, as they walk across the green grass or the natural or manmade paths during their leisurely strolls.

Sitting atop the freshly cut green grass are many families with picnic baskets and soda cans in tow. The children seem to run endlessly until exhausted from the heat of the sun.

When Sanford visits the zoo to meet with his Iraqi counterpart, he too feels a difference in his surroundings.

As he walks onto the grounds on the zoo, just as many do daily, he finds himself walking along a marble walkway with an array of birds and fowl on either side surrounding him.

“As you walk from cage to cage, you will almost definitely notice the significant difference in cleanliness of the area,” Sanford said. “Trash is placed in trash cans and sidewalks are kept swept and clean.”

“As you make your way around, you will see families laughing and smiling, couples holding hands and children tugging on their parents to point out some fascinating creature,” he adds. “It is truly an experience.”

Copyright © 2008 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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November 14, 2008 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

42. My Blood Is In This Flag

Literally.
 
As I see the Stars and Stripes cascading majestically from the highest railings here in Baghdad this week, I am reminded that my own blood marks the seam, four stories above.
 
During one of my visits to the Baghdad Coalition Headquarters a few months back, I noticed a group of soldiers struggling to hold up the palace’s massive, forty-foot-long U.S. flag as they prepared it for hanging.
 
I jumped in to keep my little piece of our treasured national symbol from touching the floor. We needed to cut old zip-ties out of the grommets, so I opened my knife and set to work on the heavy plastic fasteners.
 
Distracted by the complex exercise of cutting while lifting, I nicked one of my fingers. It was an insignificant boo-boo, and I didn’t think much of it at the time. With some embarrassment, I later noticed that a spot of my blood had soaked into the edge of that flag, staining the white, red.
 
It wasn’t until hours afterward, as I stood staring in awe at this towering display, that the greater impact of the imagery of blood in the flag struck home.

Blood Marks Old Glory

Blood Marks Old Glory

Rewind a few years, and you’ll see me as a younger, pre-retirement Navy SEAL training at one of our desert locations. My platoon was completing a particularly unimpressive series of “Immediate Action Drills” (in a nutshell: shooting and running and dropping down and shooting again).
 
The cadre bellowed at us to get more aggressive with every iteration, and I took that seriously – to the point of inadvertently smashing my rifle scope against the corner of my mouth on one particularly enthusiastic “drop” to continue firing.
 
When our lackluster performance ended, the hardcore old frogman in charge of our training said he had never seen such a disgusting spectacle in all his years as a commando. (We take solace in the knowledge that combat critique is often exaggerated to drive a point home.) After he finally got done telling us what a bunch of [blank]-ing [blankety-blank-blanks] we were, he took a long, ragged breath and we thought he was spent.
 
He wasn’t. Glaring menacingly around our sheepish group, he suddenly locked eyes with me and said, “You. You’re bleeding…I like that.”
 
And we were redeemed.
 
I’ll let the reader unfold some of the profound layers of meaning at this concept of redemption through blood.
 
Despite such boo-boos, all of the accumulated dents and scrapes I acquired during my career don’t add up to one serious injury as suffered by hundreds of thousands over hundreds of years of American life; I can still count the same number of fingers and limbs as when I got born about four decades back.
 
What is most desperately important to remember on Veterans Day is that our precious flag is soaked in the blood of every wounded and slain warrior who ever served America and freedom. If not for the blood of heroes, this flag would be nothing more than the tattered and molding scraps of a great experiment which had failed to rise and inspire the world.
 
Our grand story has been and continues to be paid for, as they say, in blood and treasure. While those who have the treasure have often found it unnecessary to also contribute blood, we have awesome exceptions. Our legendary veterans, George Washington and his comrades, are among this noble crowd. These men would have suffered the horror of a traitor’s execution if captured. Many did. They willingly risked all for this cause so much greater than themselves.

Raising the Flag

Raising the Flag

Did you know this? Washington said, “The fate of unborn millions will now depend on God, on the courage and conduct of this army.” Unborn millions! How could any ordinary man have the vision in the first, perilous birth pangs of a nation, to foresee how much would become of this fragile dream if only they risked and paid their all???
 
Let us remember our fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters, sons and daughters who truly paid the costs of freedom and an example for the world. Let us especially hold ourselves accountable to those future generations within and without our borders who may one day look back and say – of us – “But for their sacrifices, we would not know liberty.”

 

Copyright © 2008 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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November 11, 2008 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

41. Did You Understand the Barack Obama Piece?

I had such an interesting range of strong responses on article #39 (“Barack Obama – September 12th and November 5th”), that I wondered if my apolitical intent came through at all. Much of the negative and positive feedback seemed to be in response to a perception that I was cheering these election results, and that it was a political matter.
Barack Obama

Barack Obama

It’s very important to the grasp of Powerful Peace that I clear this up. I don’t take any pleasure in one side humiliating the other; quite the opposite. I know being centrist still means being in the minority in the US, but it’s my belief that if I “lean right” or “lean left” according to political inclinations, I’ll put myself in some danger of falling down. In fact, I stand straight up in the middle, and measure each issue on its merit, not basing my opinions on what some affiliation tells me I should think and decide.

Please let me know if you share this vision. Sometimes this position of listening to all sides, and respecting all persons for the inherent value of their point of view, seems pretty lonely.

Article #39 is an observation on the profound nature of the world’s opinion of us, and our opinion of ourselves, as it relates to the election of this unique individual. Please do review it in this context: Barack Obama: 9/12 and 11/5.

Copyright © 2008 by Jack Oatmon. All rights reserved.
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November 9, 2008 Posted by powerfulpeace | Global Security | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments